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The CITE, a blog published by the National Association of College Stores, takes a look at the intersection of education and technology, highlighting issues that range from course materials to learning delivery to the student experience. Comments, discussion, feedback, and ideas are welcome.

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Writing Out Lecture Notes Is Still Best

Students believe that typing notes during a lecture is
faster than writing them down by hand. They are right, but faster does not
necessarily mean better.

Researchers from the University of California, Los
Angeles (UCLA), have found that while taking notes by hand is slower, students
using that method perform better in class. Part of the issue is a tendency to
try to type notes verbatim because the student can type faster, according to
researchers Pam A. Mueller of Princeton
University and Daniel M. Oppenheimer of UCLA.

“The students who were taking longhand notes in our
studies were forced to be more selective—because you can’t write as fast as you
type,” Mueller said in an interview for National Public Radio. “And that extra processing of the material that
they were doing benefited them.”

For the study, Mueller and Oppenheimer had university
students listen to TED talks on various subjects. The first study group typed notes
on a laptop, while the second wrote out their notes. Both groups did well
remembering simple facts such as dates, but the students using their laptops
did much worse when asked questions that were more conceptual in nature.

The researchers got the same results when they told
students using laptops for note-taking to avoid writing things down verbatim.
In a third study, Mueller and Oppenheimer gave students the chance to review
their notes before testing, but students who wrote out their notes still
performed better.

“This
is suggestive evidence that longhand notes may have superior external storage
as well as superior encoding functions,” Mueller and Oppenheimer wrote in an
articleappeared in Psychological Science.